Melchior's Dream and Other Tales
with the g
gfe
ows' sisters, excepting Lettice. Th
onsense out of her. She was only eight, and very small, but, from the top row of her tigh
from one grown-up person to another, chit-chattering, whilst some of us stood pounding our knuckles in our pockets, and tyin
ith a bird of Paradise feather. When that old lady put up her eye-glass, she would have frightened a yard-dog; but Lettice stood on tip-toes and stroked the feather, saying, "What a
My mother called him a
ly Britons, in blue woad, and dine off earth-nuts in the shrubbery. As we slipped out at the side door, the yellow chariot drove up to the front. We had doormats on, as well as powder-blue, but the old lady was terribly shocked, and drove straig
ng. Uncle Patrick had not been to see us for a long time, when one day we heard that he was c
uch a very good audience. He laughs, and cries, and claps, and t
k, sitting between an owl and a magpie. And it was when I saw Edward sitting with Benjamin the cat, and two sparrows he had brought up by hand, struggling and laughing because Cocky would p
said very little to her. But I told Edward to have in the yard-dog, and practise him in being happy with the rest of the family pets. Fred, the farm-boy, promised to look out for an owl. B
We took him out once, into a snow-drift, with a lantern round his neck, but he
in the middle, he would let anything sit upon him. He would
cky sometimes looks at Benjamin's yellow eyes as if it were thinking how very easily t
I settled that Lettice should wind up the mecha